Papillophlebitis
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Papillophlebitis

Papillophlebitis
Papillophlebitis

Definition and Epidemiology:
  – Papillophlebitis is a rare condition resembling central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) in young, healthy adults (mean age ~25 years).
  – Characterized by optic disc swelling, retinal venous congestion, and hemorrhages, often with an inflammatory component.

Clinical Presentation:
  – Common symptoms: Decreased vision (most frequent), floaters, flashes, eye pain, or blurred vision.
  – Mean symptom onset to presentation: ~17 days.
  – Ocular findings: Diffuse vascular leakage, optic disc leakage, retinal hemorrhages, and cotton-wool spots.
  – Cystoid macular edema (CME) in ~57% (4/7 patients), associated with worse prognosis.
  – Visual acuity (VA): Presenting logMAR ~0.2, final ~0.06 (generally favorable).

Etiology and Systemic Associations:
  – Often idiopathic, considered a diagnosis of exclusion.
  – Systemic workup may reveal:
    – Thrombophilia: E.g., homozygous MTHFR C677T mutation (hyperhomocysteinemia, treated with folic acid).
    – Inflammatory diseases: E.g., Behçet disease (orogenital ulcers, skin rash, arthralgias).
    – Other reported associations: Polyarteritis nodosa, Guillain-Barré syndrome, Buerger’s disease, psoriatic arthritis, ulcerative colitis, Eales’ disease.
  – Family history of vascular occlusive events in ~43% (3/7 patients), but thrombophilia uncommon in most.

Imaging and Diagnosis:
  – Fundus Fluorescein Angiography (FFA):
    – Shows hyperfluorescence of retinal veins, progressing to late leakage, with optic disc and macular leakage.
    – Detects capillary non-perfusion (late complication in some).
  – Spectral-Domain OCT (SD-OCT):
    – Identifies CME (intraretinal ± subretinal fluid).
    – Monitors CME resolution (absence of fluid).
  – Color Fundus Photography:
    – Documents optic disc swelling, vascular tortuosity, hemorrhages, and cotton-wool spots.
  – Visual Field Testing:
    – May show cecocentral scotoma in severe cases.

Management and Outcomes:
  – Without CME (3/7 patients):
    – Benign course: 1 resolved spontaneously, 2 resolved with short-course oral prednisone.
    – Rapid recovery (~7–12 months).
  – With CME (4/7 patients):
    – Initial treatment: Systemic corticosteroids + intravitreal anti-VEGF (bevacizumab).
      – 1 patient: CME resolved after 3 injections, prednisone tapered, folic acid for MTHFR mutation; remission at 10 years.
      – 3 patients: Refractory CME despite anti-VEGF, steroid-dependent.
    – Escalation:
      – Steroid-sparing agents (methotrexate/azathioprine) added.
      – Adalimumab (TNF-α inhibitor) introduced at 6–8 months for persistent CME/vascular leakage.
      – CME resolution at 3–32 months post-adalimumab; improved papillophlebitis (less hemorrhages, vascular engorgement).
    – Complications:
      – Peripheral capillary non-perfusion in 2/4 patients (12–14 months post-diagnosis), requiring panretinal photocoagulation (PRP).
      – 1 patient developed neovascularization elsewhere (NVE), needing additional PRP.
  – Visual Outcome:
    – All patients achieved VA ≥6/12 at last follow-up (mean 40.4 months).
    – Guarded prognosis in some reports (up to 40% with VA ≤20/200, risk of neovascular glaucoma, vitreous hemorrhage).

Pathophysiology:
  – Multifactorial: Inflammatory (TNF-α mediated) and ischemic components.
  – TNF-α activates vascular endothelium, increasing VEGF/IL-6, enhancing vascular permeability.
  – CME severity may reflect underlying ischemia/inflammation (similar to CRVO).
  – Systemic immune-inflammation index (SII) and neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) elevated in RVO, supporting inflammatory etiology.

Complications:
  – Common: CME, peripheral non-perfusion.
  – Rare: Neovascularization (disc, retina, iris), macular hole, neovascular glaucoma, vitreous hemorrhage.
  – Late-onset ischemia (after 6 months) in ~18% of cases, necessitating long-term monitoring.

Key Management Principles:
  – Mild cases: Observation or short-course steroids.
  – CME: Systemic steroids + anti-VEGF; escalate to steroid-sparing agents (methotrexate/azathioprine) if refractory.
  – Recalcitrant cases: Add TNF-α inhibitors (adalimumab) for persistent CME/leakage.
  – Ischemia/NVE: PRP to prevent neovascular complications.
  – Systemic workup: Collaborate with hematology/rheumatology to identify thrombophilia or inflammatory diseases.

Prognostic Factors:
  – Presence of CME: Predicts prolonged course, need for aggressive therapy.
  – Early control of inflammation/ischemia: Improves outcomes.
  – Periodic monitoring: Essential for late-onset ischemia (up to 50% of neovascular cases occur >6 months).

Board-Relevant Pearls:
  – Papillophlebitis mimics CRVO but occurs in younger patients with inflammatory features.
  – FFA is critical for assessing vascular leakage and ischemia.
  – Adalimumab is a novel therapy for refractory cases, targeting TNF-α-driven inflammation.
  – Long-term follow-up is crucial due to risk of late ischemia/neovascularization.
  – Negative systemic workup is common, but MTHFR mutation and Behçet disease are notable associations.

Citation
Abdel Jalil, S., & Amer, R. (2024). The Spectrum of Papillophlebitis. *Ocular Immunology and Inflammation*, 32(10), 2515–2520. https://doi.org/10.1080/09273948.2024.2359622